Social Sharing

Winter is coming for the North American economy: Don Pittis

"Winter is coming" is the constant warning in the popular sword-and-dragon Game of Thrones stories. But as with the North American economy, it's not here yet, and the cut and thrust continues unabated.

Social Sharing

But as in Game of Thrones, Canada's GDP menace remains in the future

Fan Jim Hampshire dresses as as the fearsome Night King from Game of Thrones at Comic Con International in San Diego in 2017. (Mike Blake/Reuters)

In the sword-and-dragon fantasy Game of Thrones that has captured a huge following of readers and television viewers, characters periodically share the ominous warning, "Winter is coming."

As oil plunges to new lows, as General Motors announces plant closures and job cuts, as the U.S.-China trade war threatens global commerce, as interest rates rise, as Canadian house prices teeter and climate change menaces the world, the North American economy faces a similar feeling of impending doom.

Later this week Canada — with its own actual winter here or on the way — will get a reading on just how gloomy we should be when Statistics Canada releases its latest gross domestic product numbers.

Preparing for a gloomier future

In George R.R. Martin's books and TV series you might think that with winter so near everyone would be working together, hunkering down, storing food and fuel and getting prepared for that ominous future. But no.

Instead, the characters are just too busy honing the skills that apparently keep that pseudo-medieval society hopping, namely murdering your nearest neighbours and erstwhile allies and stealing their stuff.

Just as life only imperfectly imitates art, in North America, at least, most of us have not yet got to the murdering and stealing stage.

And while everyone from the OECD to representatives of the Alberta oil sector warn of future risks, for now the North American economy seems strong. Some are wringing their hands, but most of us are just too busy getting the job done to prepare for a gloomier future.

Winter drilling in Alberta. With world fossil fuel prices falling and the made-in-Canada oil price even lower, there are growing fears for the future of the Canadian industry. (Todd Korol/Reuters)

"I think there is a fair bit of hand-wringing out there," says Mike Moffatt, an economist at Western University's Ivey School of Business. "I think we are in a time of heightened political risk, between Trump tariffs, Brexit, Trump's kind of going-to-war with China."

In Canada just now, the oil price risk is perhaps the biggest threat. It seems such a short time ago that the U.S. was hungry for our oilsands crude and willing to pay dearly for it. But not any more.

While everyone tries to imagine solutions and looks for someone to blame, market signals, including a made-in-Canada price that some say is heading for $10 US a barrel, tell a story of an enormous Canadian industry that a pipeline may not save and that output controls will do nothing to correct.

Global oil demand continues to grow but at any moment the frightening impact of climate change could well alter that.

OPEC's nightmare

But quite apart from environmental worries, for Canadian crude, expensive to produce and transport, there is a much greater medium-term threat expected to strike well before a pipeline could possibly arrive. That threat is outlined in a report by Bloomberg's chief energy correspondent Javier Blas with the headline Texas Is About to Create OPEC's Worst Nightmare.

If as the story suggests, the Permian Basin is about to challenge the Saudis with vast new output of light sweet crude that can be pumped and sent to the Gulf Coast at a world price of $30 US a barrel, then no wonder investors are wary of Alberta bitumen mined 4,000 kilometres from Gulf refineries.

When OECD chief economist Laurence Boone gave her list of risks for the global economy last week, oil prices were just one of many.

"There's not one risk that worries us, it's the accumulation of risk," said Boone in her presentation with the rich-world think-tank's secretary general, Angel Gurria. "Trade, the impact of higher U.S. interest rates on emerging market economies, China's imbalances, oil prices, inflated asset prices, politics."

And risks come in groups, she says.

But with that list of apprehensions, neither Boone, nor Canada's Finance Minister Bill Morneau, nor Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz seems worried about an economic collapse in the new year.

Bucking the trend

In fact, according to the OECD outlook, while economic growth has peaked in the world as a whole, Canada's economy is bucking the trend and will see faster growth next year, with GDP in 2019 rising 2.2 per cent following an expected 2.1 per cent growth rate in 2018.

One of the contributors? Legal cannabis, which on its own will boost the economy by two-tenths of one per cent.

As Moffatt reminded me, Canada's property market is in gentle retreat and, while the U.S. expects slightly slower growth next year as Canada's rises, the economy should remain robust.

It is after that that the OECD says countries must be prepared to step in to sustain their economies with new fiscal spending. In other words, they should not spend now but must prepare for winter.

In some ways that's contrary to what the finance minister did last week, letting the deficit rise to help charge up GDP by cutting taxes on corporate capital spending.

According to Sonya Scott, a professor at Toronto's York University who writes about economic history, GDP has failed to capture the majority of what Canadians have done to make the country stronger.

"When we look at things like GDP, it does tell us a story, but it doesn't tell us about the sum total of economic activity, it doesn't necessarily tell us about well-being," says Scott.

And while giving tax money to companies may be one way to help keep them investing in Canada, she says, a more powerful way may be to spend that money creating a highly skilled workforce that will make corporations come here.

As the OECD's Gurria said last week, skills are the currency of the 21st century.

About the Author

Don Pittis was a forest firefighter, and a ranger in Canada's High Arctic islands. After moving into journalism, he was principal business reporter for Radio Television Hong Kong before the handover to China. He has produced and reported for the CBC in Saskatchewan and Toronto and the BBC in London. He is currently senior producer at CBC's business unit.

External Links

Comments

To encourage thoughtful and respectful conversations, first and last names will appear with each submission to CBC/Radio-Canada's online communities (except in children and youth-oriented communities). Pseudonyms will no longer be permitted.

By submitting a comment, you accept that CBC has the right to reproduce and publish that comment in whole or in part, in any manner CBC chooses. Please note that CBC does not endorse the opinions expressed in comments. Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.